Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

"Quebec's 'totalitarian' take on religious education in high school"

Here is a link to a column by Barbara Kay on a recent decision from the Quebec Court of Appeal rejecting Loyola High School's request for an exemption from the requirement that the school teach the province's mandated program called "Ethics and Religious Culture (ERC)."http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/12/12/barbara-kay-quebecs-totalitarian-take-on-religious-education-in-high-school/   

Parents in the US have had very little  success in seeking opt-outs from the public school curriculum. I haven't read the court's opinion, which I think is only available in French. Perhaps the case is complicated by Canada's system of providing public funding for private education, although that seems unlikely since the ERC apparently also applies to homeschoolers.

I suspect that the case would be decided the same way in the US, at least as a matter of US constitutional law.

Richard M. 

"The Lord came to me. Made me holy. I'm a holy man."

Want a 10-minute advent time-out during this sometimes frantic shopping, decorating, exam-taking & grading season?  My brother sent me this clip about the powerful effect of music on residents of some nursing homes, narrated by the famed author & neurologist, Oliver Sachs.  Just watch the last resident, "Henry", offering one of the most beautiful renditions of "I'll be Home for Christmas" that I've heard this season (and I spend a lot of time shuttling around kids who insist on listening to the 24-hour Christmas music station these days).  What really got me, though, was Henry's reminder of the truth that should give us all comfort, at all times, but maybe especially in the days leading to Christmas:  "The Lord came to me.  Made me holy.  I'm a holy man."

Our Lady of Guadalupe, pray for us!

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Mennonite Employer Files Suit against HHS Mandate

Anabaptists have--not surprisingly--been plaintiffs in some prominent free exercise cases. See Wisconsin v. Yoder and U.S. v. Lee. Right here in Pennsylvania, a Mennonite-owned cabinetmaking company has filed suit against the HHS contraceptive mandate (Philadelphia Inquirer story here).

One Book

Rick recently mentioned "Three Books".  I don't recall that anyone here has mentioned this book, which in my judgment is one of the best recent books on religious (and moral) freedom.  One of the book's authors, Charles Taylor, who is Catholic, is one of the most esteemed philosophers of our time.

Jocelyn Maclure and Charles Taylor, Secularism and Freedom of Consicence (Harvard, 2011), available here.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Subsidiarity. Who knew?

I've been really gratified -- and quite surprised  -- by the hundreds of downloads of my new (and admittedly not-sexy) chapter on subsidiarity in the tradition of Catholic social doctrine.  Who knew that subsidiarity would attract more readership than, say, the individual mandate and contraception?  God only knows.  

One important point to make about subsidiarity in Catholic social doctrine is that it is not a consequentialist position.  I was reminded of this recently when I read fn. 5 on p. 163 of Nick Wolterstorff's The Mighty and the Almighty: An Essay in Political Theology (CUP 2012). Wolterstorff accurately observes that many Catholics defend subsidiarity on consequentialist grounds.  To reduce the social order to the counting of consequences is, however, to make the very mistake the Church was resisting and condemning when she authoritatively formulated the ontological principle of subsidiary function.  Subsidiarity is not checks-and-balances by another name.  It is a statement about the natural right of naturally social persons and their upright associations.  We can recall that the American revolution was defined "more than anything else by its rejection of the fundamental metaphysical and methodological assumptions of the medieval Scholastic tradition" (Feser, Locke [2007], 9).  True subsidiarity, including its acknowledgment of hierarchy among societies, is hard for Locke's heirs to understand.  Maritain's rendering of subsidiarity as "the pluralist principle" hides the layeredness of society that subsidiarity affirms.  

 

Sunday, December 9, 2012

McClay, "Honoring Faith in the Public Square"

Prof. Wilfred McCay has what I think is a really helpful and important essay, at Christianity Today, in which he elaborates on five reasons why -- contra, e.g., Micah Schwartzman and Rich Shragger -- religion is "special" and "should be granted . . . deferential attention" in the public square.  He concludes the essay by addressing "an even deeper question. Can our freedom itself, and more generally the rights-based liberalism we have come to embrace in the modern West, survive without the Judeo-Christian religious assumptions that have hitherto accompanied and upheld it?"

Though himself an atheist, the Italian writer Marcello Pera has argued that it cannot—that it is impossible to uproot such ideas as human dignity from the Christian intellectual soil in which, historically, they were nourished. It's a dangerous illusion, he says, to imagine that modern liberal values can be sustained apart from religious presuppositions about the nature and destiny of man. Ironically, the very possibility of a "secular" realm of politics—which we embrace in the West as both inherently good and a necessary precondition of religious freedom—may depend upon the presence of certain distinctively Christian beliefs, embodied in culture as much as in doctrine.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Three Books

Bonus!  I've received, in recent days, real-world, dead-tree copies of three books which I am looking forward to re-reading and marking up:  Paul Horwitz's First Amendment Institutions (natch); Andy Koppelman's Defending American Religious Neutrality; and Brian Leiter's Why Tolerate ReligionI had the chance to workshop each of these books, in one way or another, and it's a real treat to have them in hand.  Those long airplane flights over Christmas are already looking less-unpleasant . . . .

Congrats to Paul, Brian, and Andy!

Thursday, December 6, 2012

The Tale of Psychic Sophie, Part II

Psychic Sophie, as I mentioned in Part I, appealed the district court's unfavorable disposition of her case to the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, which held oral argument on it Tuesday.  ChiefJudge Traxler, Judge Wilkinson, and Judge Duncan made up the panel.  Here's a news report on the argument.  A couple of highlights.

First, in response to an inquiry about whether predicting the future is "inherently deceptive" (and therefore should not receive constitutional protection), counsel for the defendant County said, "Yes, sir, it is."  To which CJ Traxler responded, "How would you characterize the Book of Revelation?"  Counsel for the plaintiff seems to have argued that predicting the future is not "inherently" deceptive provided that the prognosticator "sincerely believes" the prediction or does not believe that he is being deceptive.  Does the deceptiveness of a prediction of the future depend on the speaker's subjective belief as to its truthfulness and/or his intent to deceive?  I wouldn't think so, but I'm not a free speech maven.  But I suppose one might have replied that predictions of the future are not "inherently" deceptive; they are only contingently true (or false) -- the contingency being their (dis-)confirmation on the appointed day.  We're still waiting on Revelation.  On the other hand, Montaigne, in his essay, "On Prognostication," doesn't see what all the fuss is about: "[A]lthough there still remain among us certain methods of divination, by the stars, by spirits, by ghosts, by dreams, and otherwise -- a notable example of the senseless curiosity of our nature, occupying itself with future matters, as if it had not enough to do in digesting those at hand --.... It is no advantage to know the future; for it is a wretched thing to suffer suspense all to no purpose[.]"

Second, Judge Duncan was interested in the question of whether Psychic Sophie's business and belief system were "religious" or instead a "way of life."  But Judge Wilkinson seemed dubious: "If what she's expressed is a religion, then anything and everything is a religion."  Kevin Walsh quite rightly suggested to me that skepticism about astrology has a distinguished pedigree dating back at least to St. Augustine.  From Book IV, Chapter 3 of the Confessions:

There was in those days a wise man, very skillful in medicine, and much renowned therein, who had with his own proconsular hand put the Agonistic garland upon my distempered head, not, though, as a physician; for this disease Thou alone healest, who resistest the proud, and givest grace to the humble. But didst Thou fail me even by that old man, or forbear from healing my soul? For when I had become more familiar with him, and hung assiduously and fixedly on his conversation (for though couched in simple language, it was replete with vivacity, life, and earnestness), when he had perceived from my discourse that I was given to books of the horoscope-casters, he, in a kind and fatherly manner, advised me to throw them away, and not vainly bestow the care and labour necessary for useful things upon these vanities; saying that he himself in his earlier years had studied that art with a view to gaining his living by following it as a profession, and that, as he had understood Hippocrates, he would soon have understood this, and yet he had given it up, and followed medicine, for no other reason than that he discovered it to be utterly false, and he, being a man of character, would not gain his living by beguiling people.

Looking forward to the panel's decision.

UPDATE: A reader and speech expert sends in these interesting comments on the speech side of this case:

These issues quickly get subtle, beyond my capacity to jurisprudentially slice and dice with any authority.  I’m put in mind of another Fourth Circuit case, the horrifying Paladin Press/Rice/”Hit Man” book sale/free speech case. 

In some, but hardly all, psychic/astrology/legal and illegal lottery cases, as well as in Rice, what’s being bought and sold is in part the opportunity to experience a realistically sustainable simulacrum, a pleasant illusion, or a fantasy of one sort or another which would not be realistically available without the transaction, and the payment associated therewith. 

From the psychic, one may be buying in part, and with one degree or another of conscious recognition, the simulacrum of a caring friend or ally.  From the lottery sales clerk, one may be buying the realistic opportunity to pleasantly fantasize about what one would or would not do in radically changed economic circumstances (the actual purchase of the ticket may strengthen the vividness or the intensity of one’s fantasizing).  In buying the Hit Man book, one “creatively visualizes” oneself as self-reliant, less vulnerable, a noir anti-hero. 

But part of the subtlety is that buyer acknowledges all these things at one level, yet for the transaction to make economic sense, there must remain enough distance from those acknowledgements to sustain a sufficiently vivid illusion.  The Hit Man book, a virtual instruction manual on committing murder, actually had a disclaimer, which some readers might have, in character, cynically shrugged off, or crushed like a cigarette stub, again to one degree or another, as pointless verbiage required by the squares of the world. 

And if all this is so, it becomes harder to distinguish these activities from an escapist movie, or the shoes associated with one’s sports hero, or even a modestly effective, if transient, mood-enhancing drug.

The Tale of Psychic Sophie, Part I

Apropos of Trollope and Ike, here's a neat case -- courtesy of MOJ buddy Kevin Walsh -- that raises all kinds of interesting questions and which was just up for argument at the Fourth Circuit.  It concerns one Psychic Sophie, a self-described "spiritual counselor" operating a business in Chesterfield County, Virginia, which provides the following services (for a fee, of course): Tarot card readings, psychic and clairvoyant readings, and answering strangers' personal questions in person, over the phone, and via email.  

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